Twins: novel uses to study complex traits and genetic diseases

AJ MacGregor, H Snieder, NJ Schork, TD Spector - Trends in Genetics, 2000 - cell.com
AJ MacGregor, H Snieder, NJ Schork, TD Spector
Trends in Genetics, 2000cell.com
The challenge faced by research into the genetic basis of complex disease is to identify
genes of small relative effect against a background of substantial genetic and environmental
variation. This has focused interest on a classical epidemiological design: the study of twins.
Through their precise matching for age, the common family environment and background
environmental variation, studying diseases in non-identical twins provides a means to
enhance the power of conventional strategies to detect genetic influence through linkage …
Abstract
The challenge faced by research into the genetic basis of complex disease is to identify genes of small relative effect against a background of substantial genetic and environmental variation. This has focused interest on a classical epidemiological design: the study of twins. Through their precise matching for age, the common family environment and background environmental variation, studying diseases in non-identical twins provides a means to enhance the power of conventional strategies to detect genetic influence through linkage and association. The unique matching of identical twins provides researchers with ways to isolate the function of individual genes involved in disease together with approaches to understanding how genes and the environment interact.
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